Spurgeon's Sermons

Sermon 1428. The True Position of the Witness Within

(No. 1428)

DELIVERED ON LORD'S-DAY MORNING, AUGUST 11, 1878,

BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"He that believes on the Son of God has the witness in himself." 1 John 5:10.

SOME time ago I tried to set forth the manner of the witness and sealing of the Spirit and I have no doubt that the subjectwill still remain upon the memory of many of you. But I am led to refer to it again and to go over the same ground becauseI meet with so many instances in which mistakes are made in reference to it-mistakes which cause great sorrow and much sin.The letter which I will now read I received yesterday and it is one of many of the same subject. "Dear Mr. Spurgeon-May Iask your prayers and the prayers of your congregation, to God, that He will, by the Holy Spirit, reveal Himself to me. I havefor a long time past, I may say, years, been trying to serve Him and have a strong desire openly to join with His people,but I have not the witness in myself that I am saved and until then I dare not take the step."

Now, this letter breathes an anxious desire to be right and sincere in all things and this is to be highly commended. We oughtto be jealous over our spirit, fearful of hypocrisy and resolved to do all things in truth and sincerity. We ought to abhorthe idea of making a profession of that which is not true and, so far, this letter shows a spirit worthy of imitation. Everyoneshould be anxious that he should in nothing be a hypocrite and should not allow the profession of his lips to go one singleinch beyond the feeling of his heart. It is, again, a most proper thing that every man should desire to have the very bestpossible evidence as to his soul's salvation and if there is an evidence to be had of a very special, decisive and certainkind, it is but right that every man should cry to God for it and should feel unsatisfied until he obtains it.

But, when all this has been said, we are bound in honesty to add that it is very possible for this anxiety to become an obstacleto faith and for the desire after special evidence to become a hindrance to our receiving the evidence which the Lord hasgiven us in His Word. In our ignorance we may be overlooking the true source of peace and assurance! While straining our eyesby looking for that which God will never reveal to us, we may be missing rare consolations which lie near at hand! While cravingfor something unusual we may be neglecting that which Infinite Wisdom has put within our reach, like the foolish child whichutters hungry cries for the moon, but forgets to eat the bread upon its own plate!

There are many who, in their sincerely earnest desires to gain some token for good, are forgetting that earnest of the Spiritwhich is already within their own bosoms and thus, through darkness of spirit, they miss present comforts and are too feeblefor present duties. They sit in fetters forged by their own fancy, when they might as well arise and walk at large. May theHoly Spirit, therefore, instruct us so to handle this matter that many who are seeking for this inner witness may know thatthey already have it, or may at least obtain it this day through Jesus Christ our Lord. Here, then, is our text-"He that believeson the Son of God has the witness in Himself."

I. Our first observation is that BELIEVING ON THE SON OF GOD COMES BEFORE THE INNER WITNESS. "He that believes on the Sonof God has the witness in Himself-he believes before he has that witness-and it is only as a Believer that he obtains it.This is self-evident in the text. No one can read these words without seeing that a man must be a Believer before he has thewitness in himself. It does not say, "He who has the witness in himself becomes a Believer," but the order is reversed-"Hethat believes has the witness in himself." He believes first and then he obtains the inner witness.

The basis of faith is the testimony of God concerning His Son-the testimony of God as we find it in holy Scripture. I do notbelieve Christ Jesus to be the Son of God because of anything I feel within myself, but because God Himself declares Him tobe such! Neither do I trust my soul with Jesus because of certain emotions felt within, but because God, in the Book whichI accept as His testimony, declares that He has set forth Jesus to be the Propitiation for sin. In the

Bible I see that God Himself witnesses that whoever trusts Jesus is thereby forgiven, accepted and saved! And, therefore,I trust Him. We have no other foundation for our faith to rest upon than the witness of God. "If we receive the witness ofmen, the witness of God is greater." The testimony of God is surely enough for us! Dare we ask for more?

We must not go about to buttress the solid pillar of Divine Testimony. "Thus says the Lord" is proof enough and it is blasphemousimpertinence for us to demand further evidence! Dare we look around for something which we have observed or something whichwe have felt to be a support to the solemn declaration of the Most High? If so, we are not believing in God at all, but arewaiting for a surer witness than God, who cannot lie! In such a case we are still lost, for we cannot be saved while we arecalling God a liar by refusing to believe Him till He can bring corroborative evidence! If we were to obtain that additionalevidence, it is clear that our faith would not then stand in God, but in the additional testimony and so we should remainas to God still unbelievers!

The only basis for saving faith is the testimony of God Himself concerning His Son Jesus Christ! "And this is the testimonythat God has given to us eternal life and this life is in His Son." Note that the words which follow our text assure us verysolemnly that the rejection of this basis, namely, God's own testimony, involves the utmost possible guilt. "He that believesnot God, has made Him a liar, because He believes not the record which God gave of His Son." Now, it is quite clear that thisdoes not refer to any inward witness, because the man who does not believe Christ has no inward witness and cannot have any!He cannot be guilty of rejecting what he never had-but God has given an outward witness to all mankind-a witness containedin Holy Scripture, clear and express and therein He declares that Jesus Christ is His Son and the appointed Savior of men!And He bids men trust in Him, promising that they shall thus be saved.

It is the rejection of the Revelation of God which involves the unbeliever in transcendent guilt, because his unbelief istantamount to saying that God speaks lies-that He has deliberately given us a Bible which is a fiction; that He has set beforeus hopes which will end in disappointment; that He has threatened us with a doom which is a mere bugbear-that He has sentus a Savior who cannot save, who has presented a Sacrifice in which there is no real efficacy! The rejection of Christ asour Savior is the most pointed way of calling the Lord a liar! Surely we ought to start hack from such guilt as this, forit stabs at God's honor and, inasmuch as it impugns His truthfulness, it robs Him of one of the brightest jewels of His crown!

O beloved Hearers, be not guilty of this, I pray you, but believe your God! What if all men contradict Him-be it yours tobelieve Him-"Let God be true and every man a liar." Believe God, though every feeling of your nature should seem to controvertHis testimony, for feelings deceive and consciousness may be a dream-but God cannot lie-His Word is Truth itself! This, then,is the basis of faith, and the basis of faith which cannot be rejected without the utmost sin. Let me put it another way.I hear and I read that God has sent His Son Jesus Christ to save sinners-and thus I learn that I must trust Christ and I shallthen obtain the benefit of His salvation. I believe this. I trust Christ and I am saved. This salvation gives me peace andrest and I become confirmed in my belief.

Now there are many who want this peace and rest before they will believe. They expect harvest before sowing and will not sowunless their preposterous desire can be granted! My dear Friend, you cannot expect to have the natural order reversed in thisfashion! Why should you need it? Has not God spoken the Truth and if it is the Truth of God, why do you not believe it? Theessence of faith lies in believing that God speaks the Truth and in acting upon His Word because it is the Truth! Is thismore than God has a right to expect of you? Why should there be any refusal to render what is so manifestly His due? Why shouldwe ask for further evidence whether it is in ourselves or in others? Should we not at once say, "God has said it. It is true.I will act upon it. And since He says Christ died for sinners and saves all that trust in Him, I will trust Him and I shallbe saved"?

Now, this basis of faith is abundantly sufficient. I feel half ashamed to have to insist upon this most evident Truth of God,for, if we were not desperately set on mischief and alienated from God, we should feel this at once! Has God said it? Thento ask any confirmation of it is a direct insult to Him-a gratuitous impertinence against the Majesty of Heaven! Has God saidit? Then we are more bound to believe than if all the scientific men in the world for centuries had witnessed to it! Has Godsaid it? We are more sure of it than if all the traditions of all nations had handed it down to us! Has God said it? Thenwe are surer of it than if our reason proved it by mathematical demonstration! Has God said it? Then we are more certain ofit than if we saw it with our eyes-for they might be deceived-or than if we heard it with our ears, for they might be imposedupon. Our senses are deceivable, but God is not deceivable! He must be true and we may wisely

cast the weight of our souls upon His faithfulness. And when we do, we may take all the consequences, fully assured that whatthe Lord has promised He is able to perform.

Now, though this basis is sufficient, the Lord, knowing our unbelief, has been pleased not to add to it, but to set it beforeus in a graciously amplified manner. He says, "There are three which bear witness on earth, the Spirit, the water, and theblood, and these three agree in one." That Jesus Christ is the Son of God and that He can and does save sinners and that Hewill save all who believe in Him is proven, first, by the giving of the Holy Spirit. He descended first at Pentecost, visiblyand perceptibly, in rushing wind and cloven tongues of fire and He manifested His power by the marvelous gift of speakingin languages which the disciples had never learned. The Holy Spirit was mightily with the Apostles, bearing witness that Jesuswas the Son of God and that the Gospel which they preached was Divine.

The Holy Spirit has not returned to Heaven and though His miraculous power is no longer seen among us in the physical world,He is still working spiritual miracles in the Church. He still regenerates; He still enlightens; He still consoles; He isstill the help of our infirmity in prayer. He is still our Comforter and Guide. In many blessed and useful ways, for whichHe is to be adored, the Holy Spirit is still in the midst of the Church to witness to the truth of the Gospel. Instead ofmiracles we have the Presence of the Holy Spirit-men quickened from death in sin, hearts renewed, eyes enlightened, soulsregenerated-these are the standing witnesses of God in the Church to the Truth of the Gospel.

Then, there is the witness of the water. By the water, I understand to be meant that Living Water of which, if a man drinks,he shall live forever. And it indicates the spiritual life which abides in the Church-the life and the cleansing which Godgives to Believers. Now, there are thousands of us who can bear witness that we possess a life to which we once were strangers-butby believing in Jesus Christ that life has been given to us-as it shall also be given to all who hear me this day, upon theirbelieving in Jesus! That Water of Life abiding in the Church and always flowing out of the very midst of her living membersis another form of the witness of God, a part of the one solid basis upon which true faith must rest.

Then there is the blood-a third witness-that blood of Atonement which speaks better things than that of Abel, which bringspeace to the guilty conscience and ends the strife within. There is no voice like it to believing ears! This is another andmost powerful form of the witness of God. He does pardon sin and give peace to the conscience-the fact is known to thousandsand is the abiding witness of God to His dear Son. The abiding power of the Spirit, the water and the blood are God's continuanceof His one testimony that Jesus Christ is the appointed Savior and that whoever trusts in Him shall be saved. Beyond thisevidence, the hearer of the Gospel may expect nothing. What more can he need? What more can he desire? If you refuse Christupon the witness of God, you must refuse Him outright, for no other witness shall ever be given unto those who believe notupon the solemn testimony of God!

And, Beloved, let me say that this basis which has been so graciously amplified in the triple witness of the Spirit, the waterand the blood, has this to commend it-it is everlasting and immutable! Did you believe in Jesus Christ 50 years ago? Did youthen trust Him because God declared Him to be worthy of your confidence? That witness of God remains in all its potency today!A thousand years ago a poor sinner came to Jesus because God had assured him in the Scriptures that there he should find mercy.And today another sinner may come with just the same confidence, for the guarantee of faith is unaltered! What a blessingthis is!

Our feelings change-sometimes the inward witness burns brightly and sometimes it becomes very dim-sometimes we feel tenderin heart and at another time we are hard as a millstone! At one moment we are zealous and at another moment indifferent. Itwould never do to have such a shifting basis of our faith. Such a moving, shivering quicksand as this would never satisfyus very long! But what a rock we have in God's Word! He has said it and it must be true, "He that has the Son has life." WhenI look within I cannot always tell by my feelings whether I have obtained spiritual life or not. But since I know that I believein Jesus, I know that I have eternal life because God has said so! I, trusting His Son Jesus Christ, know myself to be savedover the head of all my feelings, let them be what they may, for God has said, "He that believes has everlasting life."

And you, poor Soul, are not invited to come to Christ this morning because there is something in you that is a guarantee foryour coming-some inward witness bearing testimony to your fitness! No, you are to come because there is witness enough inthis Book! Because there is witness enough in the fact that the Spirit of God is in the Church! Because there is witness enoughthat the Living Water is still imparted unto men and that the blood of Jesus has not lost its

power, but cleanses from all sin! If you will not believe upon this all-sufficient witness, you cannot expect to receive anyother, for this is the witness of God upon which men savingly believe in Christ Jesus!

Now, dear Friends, the faith which will not and cannot rest on this basis is evidently no faith in God at all, but a proudresolve to demand other evidence than His Word. "Well," says one, "but suppose I were to see a vision? I should then believe."That is to say, you would believe your vision, but that vision would, in all probability, be the result of a fevered brainand you would be deceived! "Uh, but if I could hear a voice, then I could believe." That is to say, you refuse the sure Wordof testimony in the Bible and will only believe God if He will condescend to indulge your whims! Voices which you might thinkyou heard are not to be depended upon-for imagination easily creates them! When daydreaming I have heard many voices, or thoughtI did, but they may have been echoes, or birds far up in the air, or mere fancies. There is nothing to be depended upon inhearing a voice in the air!

Will you put that in competition with the revealed will of God? "Oh, but if I had a special Revelation." Such a special Revelationyou have no right to look for! I speak most plainly here-no additional Revelation is to be expected because the Book of Godis ended-the Revelation of God is finished and he that adds to the sacred Book is cursed! If you, therefore, say that Godhas made a new Revelation to you, you run a dreadful risk of the curses which are written in this book! God, by His Spirit,brings old Truths of God home to the heart, gives new light to our eyes and causes the Word to exercise new power over us-butHe reveals no new facts and He utters no words in any man's ears concerning his condition and state. We must be content withthe old Revelation and with the life and power and force with which the Holy Spirit brings it to the heart.

Neither must any of us seek to have any additional Revelation, for that would imply that the Scriptures are incomplete. What?Has God spoken all this volume that you may believe on His Son and is not that enough for you? Must He go out of His way tomake some private communication to you? Is all that which He has already spoken to be treated as a lie unless He, at yourdictation, condescends to say something for you, personally? Are you too good or too great to be saved like other sinners?That is what it practically comes to! "Oh," you say, "but if I felt such-and-such, I would believe." Suppose you did? Thenyour confidence would be in your feelings and not in God-and what would that be but presumption seeing that there cannot beanything in your feelings which can make God true! God is true, feel whatever you may! Believe Him, then, for it is to thatfaith in His Son that He gives salvation and not to faith in your feelings!

Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness. But if Abraham had stood higgling and haggling till he hadseen this and that, he would not have believed nor found righteousness by faith! Let me tell those of you who will not believein God till you get a certain experience, or sign, or wonder to be added to God's Word, that those of His people who havebeen the longest walking by faith have to come back very often to the first foundation of faith in the outer witness of Godin His Word! It has been the privilege of some of us to possess the inner witness for years and yet, at certain times, itdeparts and we have to fall back on the foundation-the Truth of God.

When the winds are out and the storms are loosed and temptation howls through the soul, we always fly to the Word of God andnot to our own experience! We get away from what we feel to what the Lord has said. One ounce, of, "It is written," givesmore confidence than a ton of what we have felt. We are apt, in troublous times, to judge that our happy feeling was a delusionand our confidence a mistake. "True, I did think that I stood and looked within the pearly gates and was full of heavenlyjoy. But, alas, it may have been all a dream!" This is, however, no dream-that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners-thereis no mistake about that fact! That God has sent forth His Son to be a Propitiation for sin-there is no imagination aboutthat!

There it stands in black and white in the Scriptures of Truth and to that witness we again fly! Whether I am saint or sinner.Whether I am an heir of Heaven or an heir of wrath, there stands the Word of God-"He that believes in Him is not condemned."I do believe in Him and I am not condemned, nor shall all the devils in Hell make me think I am, since God has said I am not!On that my faith shall stand unshaken, come what may! Let this suffice upon our first head, that believing on the Son comesbefore the inner witness.

II. Secondly, THE INNER WITNESS NATURALLY FOLLOWS UPON FAITH. "He that believes on the Son of God has the witness in himself."It is quite impossible that the inner witness should precede faith and this you will clearly see if you think a minute. Hereis a medicine well-known to be exceedingly efficacious in a certain disease. A sick man says

that he will not believe in its power until he has some inner witness of it! It is clear to you that he cannot possibly haveany evidence of its power until he has at least enough faith to take the medicine and give it a chance of operating upon him.So is it with this blessed catholicon of the precious blood of Jesus-you cannot have any inner witness to its power till,first of all, you receive it by faith!

"To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to as many as believed on His name"-butthe reception must come first! And you cannot have this witness apart from faith, because the Holy Spirit never sets His sealto a blank sheet of paper. There must, first of all, be the writing of faith upon the heart and then the Spirit of God putsHis attesting seal to it! Would you have God the Holy Spirit witness to a falsehood? And yet He would be witnessing to a lieif He gave an inner witness of salvation to a man who is still an unbeliever and who, consequently, is already condemned!If you refuse to believe God's Word, how can you think that the Spirit will bear witness of anything in you except it is toyour condemnation? There must be faith before-and then the witness will follow after.

But let it be especially remembered that a man may have the witness within him and sometimes he may not perceive it. You say,"That is strange"? Yet reflect-you might be the possessor of a large estate and an adversary might contest your right to it.What if you cannot find your title deeds? The estate might be clearly enough yours, but those deeds of yours might be mislaidand locked up in a forgotten drawer-and you might be sorely put to it, perhaps, until the day of trial settles the disputeas to whether it is yours or not.

I believe that many a child of God has plenty of witness in his own soul, but he has not the wisdom to perceive it. Plentyof witness, but through ignorance or carelessness he does not collect it and refresh himself with it. If he believes, he hasthe witness within himself and he will be comforted if he has but light enough to know what the witness is. But often, throughnegligence in searching the Word of God, he has the witness but cannot discover it. He wishes to read it, but his ignorancehas mislaid it!

Now, what is this witness within? It may be seen as follows-take the verses that precede my text and you get one form of it.Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of sinners-that is the main point to be witnessed. First the Spirit, after wehave believed, bears witness in our soul that it is so, because we perceive that the Spirit has led us to believe in Jesusand has given us repentance. The Spirit has renewed us. The Spirit has made us different from what we were. The Spirit helpsus in prayer. The Spirit lifts us up upon the wings of praise. The Spirit works upon us wondrously and so we gather that thiscomes to us through believing in Jesus. He is, indeed, the Savior of sinners, for we are saved!

Then the water bears witness within us-that is to say, we feel a new life, we feel the Living Water in our hearts and we areconscious of being alive to things to which we were once dead! We find that now there is within us a new nature which we neverpossessed before. All this becomes comfortable evidence that what we have believed is true. We have proved it to be true,for we have the life which was promised to us upon our believing in Jesus. Thirdly, the precious blood within our souls bearsfurther witness, for when it gives us peace, we sing as sinners bought with blood and rejoice before God as cleansed by theblood from all sin. And, as having access into that which is within the veil by the sprinkled blood, we feel deep peace withinour souls through the voice of the blood. This is a witness, sweet and clear, within us, proving that what we received fromGod's Word without any other evidence is certainly true.

Now we have confirmatory witness within our spirits, given not because we demanded it, but as a sweet reward and graciousprivilege. We should never have received it if we had not first believed on the naked Word of God-only after that does thewitness flow naturally into the heart. Another part of the witness lies in this, that when we have believed we receive life-andaccording to the 11th verse, this is the record that God has given us eternal life-and this life is in His Son. We have believedand we feel that we have obtained the life-we are doubly assured that the witness of God is true. We believed it, before,because God had said it. And now we are permitted to feel it since the life is welling up within our souls like a fountain!We now know that Jesus Christ must be the Son of God, for to whom else is it given to bestow life? Who else could have bestowedupon us this high, this spiritual, this heavenly life?

In detail, the inward evidence lies very much this way. First, a wondrous sense of change comes over the Believer. Havingbelieved in Jesus Christ upon the simple evidence of God, there is a work of regeneration performed upon him and he feelshimself altogether transformed. A young girl once said, "Either the whole world is changed, or else I am." Everything seemsso altered, for it is seen with new eyes! The man undergoes a radical change of feelings! All things are

reversed to him-his sweets are now sour and his sours are now sweet! And finding himself so thoroughly new-created, he says,"This is the finger of God," and he infers that the power which has worked all this comes from the Son of God.

Then, again, there is a wondrous power which goes with the Word of God, not always, but often. Are you not conscious, my Brethren,of often feeling, when you are reading the Word, or hearing it, as you never felt when listening to any other form of speech?Get to the foot of the Cross, for instance, and look up and view the flowing of your Savior's precious blood-do you not feel,then, as nothing else can make you feel? You are reading a religious book and it has a holy effect upon you. But if you reflect,you will see that it is only powerful because it is borrowed from the Word of God. The voice of God thrills your soul in amore than magical manner as no other voice ever can! Why, I guarantee you, a Christian blindfolded would know which was atext of Scripture and which was not by its effect upon his heart!

The very words are so majestic that none can imitate their dignity-and when they are applied with power they lay us low orlift us up as only Divine Words could do! "Where the word of a king is, there is power," and this becomes an inner witnessto the sovereign Truth of the Gospel! The same witness is borne by a sense of being put into our right place. You were allout of place before, but having believed in Jesus Christ you are put in your right position. You stand in harmony with theDivine system and this you feel could only be effected by the Truth of God-for a lie works to disorder and not to right. Ifanybody had said to the prodigal son-"I doubt whether you have a father. I doubt your father's love. I doubt whether he hasany house where there is bread enough and to spare,"

He might have been puzzled to answer those wretched doubts while he was standing at the swine trough, but you could not troublehim with it when he has reached his father's house and was sitting down at the table of love listening to the sound of themusic and dancing, and feasting upon the fatted calf! If any skeptic had then said to him, "There is no father's love," why,his cheeks still sweetly tingling with the kisses would have supplied him with his best reply! I do not suppose he would havedeigned to answer the doubter except by a quiet smile! And he would have gone on feasting upon the fatted calf or, if he didanswer, he would have said, "Go, take your doubts to one who will receive them. I am right again with my dear father, forhe has forgiven me and I feel his love and know for myself that he abounds in tenderness."

That deep feeling of peace which comes to us through believing in Jesus makes us feel quite sure that He can save and thatwe are secure in Him! We took God at His Word when we had no feeling, but having believed in Jesus Christ we are now consciousof a wonderful rest-"The peace of God which passes all understanding." We see that we are forgiven, justly forgiven, savedby mercy, but still not to the violation of the Justice of God and, therefore, we are perfectly at ease. Yes, and sometimeswe rise beyond peace! I am not going to tell many of the high secrets of the inner life, this morning, but yet I will confessthat at times-

"Our joys divinely grow, Unspeakable, like those above, And Heaven begins below." This, again, is a part of the inner witnessthat the Gospel is true.

And what if I were to speak of growing holiness of character, of increased conformity to Christ's image? Do not these forma good inner witness? What if I were to speak of growing strength so that the things we dare not once attempt we now accomplishwith ease, or of growing patience under tribulation? Either of these would be noble proofs! What if I spoke of fellowshipwith God, or of peace in the prospect of death, or of a thousand other blessings which make up Christian experience? MightI not claim that all these go to make up a very powerful inner witness which abundantly seals the Truth of God which we atfirst accepted as matter of pure faith in the testimony of God?

III. As time hastens I will only pause for a moment to say that THIS INNER WITNESS IS EXCEEDINGLY EXCELLENT. First, becauseit is very plain and easy to be understood. Numbers of you have never read "Butler's Analogy." And if you were set to studyit you would go to sleep over it. Never mind, you may have an unanswerable "analogy" in your own souls! You might not understandButler or Paley, but you will understand the witness of your own spirit! You may talk to a pauper about mastication and digestionand assimilation and he will open his eyes and wonder what you mean-but he will understand your practical meaning well enoughif you give him a good dinner!

So it is with the things of God-theological terms are difficult, but if you believe in Jesus Christ and He saves your soul,you will understand that He is the Divine Savior and nobody will be able to convince you otherwise! That is another pointof its excellence-that it is unanswerable! A man is told that a certain medicine is mere quackery. "See here," says

he, "it healed me." What do you say to such an argument? You had better leave the man alone. So when a Christian is told thatthe Gospel is all nonsense and he replies, "It saved me. I was a drunk and it made me sober and more. I was a man of strongpassions and it tamed me and more." What can you say to such facts? Why, nothing! It must be with you as with the rulers ofold-"When they saw the man that was healed standing with Peter and John, they could say nothing against them."

Such argument as this is very abiding in its results. A man who has been transformed and feels himself daily renewed by theGospel, cannot be baffled because every day his argument is renewed and he finds fresh reasons within himself for knowingthat what he believed is true! Such argument is always impossible to defeat. Sometimes if you are challenged to a controversyyou have to reply, "Wait till I run upstairs and consult a few books." But when the evidence is personal- "I have felt it,I know it, I have tasted it, handled it"-why you have your argument at your fingertips at all times! Such witness as thisgives a man great boldness. He does not begin to conceal his opinions, or converse with his neighbor with an apologeticalair, but he is positive and certain!

I confess that when I have to argue about the truth of Divine things it is a dreary task. I am so sure of these things, myself,by living and actual test, that I am amazed that other people are not sure, too! And while they are wanting me to argue aboutthis point or that, it seems to me like asking a man to prove that there is a sun in yonder sky. I bask in his beams, I swoonunder his heat, I see by his light-and yet they ask me to prove his existence?! Are they mad? What do they want me to prove?That God hears prayer? I pray and receive answers every day! That God pardons sin? I was in my own esteem the blackest ofsinners and sunk in the depths of despair, yet I believed, by God's Grace, and by that faith I leaped into a fullness of lightand liberty at once!

Why do they not try it themselves? You want me to prove that bread is fit for food? Why, Man, I have been living upon it foryears! I do not know how to begin my proof. Take a bit of bread, Man, and eat and know for yourself. "Taste and see that theLord is good." We believe and are sure and, therefore we speak, but we do not wonder if men reject our witness, for they refusethe witness of God!

IV. I close by saying that excellent as this inner witness is, IT MUST NEVER BE PUT IN THE PLACE OF THE

DIVINE WITNESS IN THE WORD. Why not? Because it would insult the Lord and be contrary to His rule of salvation by faith. Because,moreover, it is not always with us in equal clearness, or rather, we cannot equally discern it. If the brightest Christianbegins to base his faith upon his experiences and his attainments, he will be in bondage before long. Beloved, build on whatGod has said and not upon your inward joys. Accept these precious things, not as foundation stones, but as pinnacles of yourspiritual temple! Let the main thing be-"I believe because God has spoken." If any other evidence comes to your net, acceptit, but go on fishing by FAITH! Faith in God, in God's naked Word!

Then, if the Lord's hand should turn and you, in Providence, should be stripped bare like Job, so that you sit on a dunghillcovered with boils, you will be able to say, "I believed that God loved me when He gave me children. I believed God lovedme when I had sheep and oxen. I believed that God loved me when I had camels and asses, but still, these were not the grandreasons of my faith, but God Himself and, therefore, I still believe that He loves me now that every child is dead, all myproperty is swept away and I am sick. Yes, though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." That is faith! God grant you to havethat faith which can sing, "Though the fig tree shall not blossom and there shall be no herd in the stall, yet will I rejoicein the Lord."

Though there is no evidences of Grace in me; though there are no joys; though there is a broken peace; though there is sinto mourn over and though there is hardness of heart to stagger me-yet I still took the Lord Jesus as a sinners' Savior atthe first and I take Him as a sinners' Savior now! I did not trust Him at the first because I was a saint and now I will notdoubt Him because I find out more and more that I am a sinner-but I will still go to Him just as I am and rest on the greatsalvation which God has provided for me! Sinner, I charge you, do not wish to put your notion of an inner witness into theplace of God's own witness which He bears to you and to every creature under Heaven in His sacred

Word!

You may not say, "I will trust Jesus when I have the inner witness," because you never can have the inner witness till youhave first trusted in the redeeming Lord! Until you are willing to believe God's bare Word and come to Christ in all yourguilt and accept His cleansing blood and perfect righteousness, you never can have any evidence within, unless it is evidenceof your own folly and sinfulness! Therefore, what is the use of your looking for it? Why seek the living among

the dead? You cannot have this inner witness before believing and you ought not to desire it-for the desire is unreasonable!

I have shown you that it would be irrational to expect the Spirit of God to set His seal to a blank-how can He do so? If youwill not believe God, why should you expect to be saved? And if not saved, how can you have the inner witness? If a king wereabout to pardon men simply upon the condition that they would trust his mercy-and they were to answer, "We will not believein your clemency unless you indulge our whims"-would you wonder if he did not pardon them? Moreover, let me ask you, how canyou ever be right with God if you will not believe Him? Certainly I could not count you to be my friend if you refused tobelieve my solemn statements. If you counted me a liar, how could I call you my friend? What peace can there be till confidenceis restored? Are not those God's enemies who refuse to believe His witness about His own Son?

Now, my Hearers, will you believe God or not? Dear Souls, will you believe God or not? "Oh," you say, "but!"- Now, that isnot the question! What "but" can there be about this matter? Either the Lord is true or false! I know you can make a hundred"buts," but will you believe God, or will you call Him a liar? O Spirit of the living God, show men the sin of unbelief andbring them to see how just and right a thing it is simply to trust God and believe His witness concerning Jesus Christ!

Now, I put you to this-If God is not worthy to be trusted, say so and go your way! But if He is. If He has spoken the truth,why do you not believe Him? If, after this, you refuse to believe in Jesus, your doom will be upon your own heads! But ifyou will trust Christ, you may rejoice, for you are saved! This is the Gospel that we are commanded to preach to every creature-"Hethat believes and is baptized shall be saved, and he that believes not shall be damned." God give His own blessing for Christ'ssake. Amen.

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